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Rivera going to his roots to innovate his future.


panthers55

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6 hours ago, mjligon said:

Sounds about right.

Revisit a style of defense that worked in 2010.

Much like fashion, football likes to take the familiar and put a new twist on it to make it relevant for today.  But as McCoy said, football is football.

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that team didn’t even make the playoffs lmfaoooooo

this article is dumb. if ron is looking at every player evaluation he makes with the angle “what player from the 2010 chargers roster is he most analogous to” and determines how to utilize them through that methodology, october and november are going to be absolutely miserable here and we’ll probably be looking at top 15 draft prospects in december.

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Revisiting Rivera’s past schematics is fine. The game changes every year, so I’d be careful as to not drown myself in a sea of decade-old Chargers film study. 

Multi-look nickel fronts will arguably be the most vital element of the defensive installation (it will almost feel like their base packages). Consider the schedule, and the personnel, scheme and tendencies they are likely to face. If the offense performs up to standards this year, very few games will see the opposing offense shortening the game and massaging the clock from 21 or 22 personnel.

McCoy and Short are crucial in all of this. Rivera may choose to employ a 2-gap (80’s Giants) 34 look. I’d doubt it. These two players are more suited for a 1-gap 34 alignment, with a NT (Poe) over center and the 5-tech ends sliding inside to a B-gap position, where their athleticism and pass rush skills are optimized. 

Of course, for a more traditional 4 man front in 3rd and 7+, Poe gets a breather while McCoy and Short provide—one would presume—an elite interior dynamic, bookended by Addison and Irvin/Burns. 

It should to be a great deal of fun to see it come together. 

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